Estate of Horkan v. Croal

214 N.W. 438, 193 Wis. 286, 1927 Wisc. LEXIS 296
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 214 N.W. 438 (Estate of Horkan v. Croal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Horkan v. Croal, 214 N.W. 438, 193 Wis. 286, 1927 Wisc. LEXIS 296 (Wis. 1927).

Opinion

Eschweiler, J.

The executors, appellants here, contend that the claim of Mrs. Croal, respondent, -ought not to be entertained at all because not presented or filed within the time limited by statute and by the original order of the court for the filing and hearing of claims.

Having reached the conclusion, as hereinafter stated, that Mrs. Croal is entitled to have declared certain property coming into the hands of the executors impressed with a trust in her favor, we are of the opinion that such a right is not a claim against the estate proper as in the case of ordinary debts or demands covered by sec. 313.08, Stats, (sec. 3844). She is entitled to, recover here because certain property in the possession of the deceased and coming into the possession of. the executors was really her property, not his or theirs. The executors took no stronger title than the deceased had to the particular property to which she asserts the better title. It is in reality a contest over title to certain specific personal property, the executors claiming it belongs to them for the estate, she claiming it as hers, rather than the ordinary case of a claim against the assets of an estate where title to such assets is concededly in the estate and the claimant seeks merely to be paid therefrom and but proportionately only if such assets are insufficient to pay all claims. Such a dis[291]*291tinction is recognized in King v. Lawrence, 14 Wis. 238; Lannon v. Hackett, 49 Wis. 261, 265, 5 N. W. 474.

We think the situation here is well within and controlled by Biron v. Scott, 80 Wis. 206, 211, 49 N. W. 747, as held by the court below; and within the rule as recognized elsewhere. Brown v. Sebastopol, 153 Cal. 704, 96 Pac. 363, 19 L. R. A. n. s. 178; First Nat. Bank v. Hummel, 14 Colo. 259, 23 Pac. 986, 8 L. R. A. 788.

On the main question involved we think that what was done by the deceased in causing to be executed a $5,000 note and mortgage in the name of his daughter in the original transaction with the Powers Brothers of May, 1918; the letter written by him in November, 1920, set out above, when the proceeds of such loan were invested by him in the $5,000 note of the Alauston Electric Service Company and expressly directed by him to be in the name of the daughter, was sufficient action on his part, evidenced in writing, to make an effective, completed, and irrevocable trust relationship in favor of. the daughter as to the fund of $5,000.

The creating of such a trust may be done'very informally and no precise method is or can be prescribed. Pratt v. Ayer, 3 Pin. 236, 255.

It is quite evident that at the time he directed the notes in 1918 and 1920 to be made out in her name and not his, that he was by his acts and in his writings showing an intention that she was to benefit to the extent of- $5,000 in a fund originally his and which he lawfully and naturally might devote to such purpose. A fair presumption arises that he intended something valid rather than something void. Jones v. Caird, 153 Wis. 384, 388, 141 N. W. 228. He then visibly attached to the transaction nothing showing a then present intention to reserve a right to subsequently revoke. It seems a situation clearly within the case of Cerney v. Pawlot, 66 Wis. 262, 28 N. W. 183, where, by direction of [292]*292á father advancing the money, the note and mortgage were made in the daughter’s name, and it was held that the transaction was irrevocable in her favor and no trust in his favor thereby resulted. Page 266. If in this case the father’s then intention was that evidenced by his directions for the making out of the notes payable to her, in the notes themselves so made, and in his letter of November 2, 1920, supra they all so clearly express the idea that the fund was hers and not his that the fund then became hers by his own acts and declarations and he became a .trustee. He then attached her right to the fund, and his subsequent desire to change such disposition, however prompted, or his good-faith belief that he might so change, is entirely immaterial. That mutual relationship of trustee and.cestui que trust once established, it could thereafter no more be changed,. except by mutual consent, than could a completed gift be so destroyed. Lamberson v. Lamberson, 175 Wis. 398, 408, 184 N. W. 708; Kellogg v. Adams, 51 Wis. 138, 146, 8 N. W. 115.

That there was no such delivery of these respective instruments to the daughter as would be necessary in order to make a completed gift is here immaterial. He might properly reserve for himself the right to receive the interest on such fund during his lifetime and he could properly hold the said instruments for -that purpose. He might also properly constitute himself trustee for her as to the principal sum and assume or presume to act either as such trustee or as her agent for the subsequent 'handling and control of said fund. Govin v. De Miranda, 140 N. Y. 474, 477, 35 N. E. 626. None of such situations are necessarily so in conflict with the idea of a trust as to destroy its effect as such as of the time of its creation; much less by anything subsequently he desires should be done or that is done by the creator of the trust can he destroy its original validity.

Appellants contend that the situation here is similar with the facts in Ambrosius v. Ambrosius, 239 Fed. 473, holding that an infant daughter could not assert a trust in a cer[293]*293tain list of securities recited to be in an envelope in certain custody and the list closing with the statement that “All these foregoing securities belong to my daughter [naming her] and are held by me in trust for her during my lifetime.” A copy of this list was left with the grandmother. The substantial difference between that and this case, however, lies in the fact that the securities there stood in donor’s name or in the name of third persons indorsed in blank, and some of the securities were from time to time sold and scratched off the list. A second similar list was also treated the same way, he using some of the securities in borrowing money. The two lists were found after his death with a large number of the securities listed thereon, together with others not mentioned, but no showing was made that they were ever in the custody specified in the statement. The court held that there could be no present gift for want of delivery, and from the fact that he kept them in his own name,. using them for his own purposes, as he did his other securities, that it could not be held that he intended to divest himself of ownership sufficiently to establish a trust.

Also Eschen v. Steers, 10 Fed. (2d) 739, where by letter a bank was directed to transfer the money on the father’s account to that of the daughter, but in which he did not declare that he held the same in trust for her and where he retained complete dominion over the money to the extent of using it all if necessary for his own benefit, and it was held such could not be enforced as an executed trust, but was merely a tentative plan for testamentary disposition. On account of such features that case manifestly would not apply here.

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Bluebook (online)
214 N.W. 438, 193 Wis. 286, 1927 Wisc. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-horkan-v-croal-wis-1927.